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PORTFOLIO OF 5ANTA ROSA 


AND VICINITY 



Portraying in Picture and Pen the Beauty of Picturesque Santa Rosa 
Valley and Sonoma County, its Productiveness, Climate, Advantages 
Obtained in Living Here, etc, Photo Reproductions of Valleys, Or¬ 
chards and Retreats, our Factories, Business Firms, Transportation 
Facilities, Churches, Schools, Prominent Men and last, but not least, 
our Homes, the Pride of this Select Section of California 


o « 0 
« c 
e e t 


PUBLISHED AND ENGRAVED BY H. A. DARM5, SANTA ROSA, CALIFORNIA 

THE, PRL55 DEMOCRAT, PRINTERS AND BINDERS 


















PORTFOLIO OF SANTA 
ROSA AND VICINIT'i 


Entered according to the Act of Con¬ 
gress, Ju^. 1909 byH. A. DARMS, 
in the office of the Librarian of Con¬ 
gress, Washington, D. C. 


ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 





Cla. A, 

JUL 


L4 6 T> 1 

?6 1909 
















IRtFACfL. No apology is 

P m necessary for the follow- 
wB ing pages, in which are 
^ briefly portrayed in pen 
and picture a small Dart 
of resourseful Sonoma 
the vicinity of Santa Rosa, 
pages give the reader and 
those who contemplate coming here, the 
desired information. 


County in 
Mav these 


The success of this book is, to a great 
extent, due to the Santa Rosa Chamber 
of Commerce, which has endorsed and 
recommended it to the public; The Press 
Democrat and the Santa Rosa Republican, 
who approve of our methods and have spoken favorably through their columns; leading business firms 
who have subscribed liberally, besides many others who have helped in many ways. 


H. C. 5TROUT, Advertising Manager 


H. A. DARMS, Photo Engraver 


All of these kindnesses are gratefully acknowledged by 


THE. PUBL15HLR. 
































IS > or TUB ' 



APPROVED AND DECL'ARED 
THE OFFICIAL MAP OF SONOMA COUNTY 
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS 


CHAJKMA* 
CO. CL*** 


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sfPPftttVED f*y 
■ co. Bo /firt w eou&iTiON 
-mm*"**- CJ** 
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MAP OF SONOMA COUNTY 

(Permission of Geo. H. Winkler. County Surveyor 



















































BUSINESS HOUSES— 

Banks: 

Exchange Bank 
Santa Rosa Bank 
Santa Rosa National Bank 
Savings Bank of Santa Rosa 
Union Trust-Savings Bank 
Belden & Upp, Druggists 
Belden & Hehir, Harness 
Burbank Productions - - - 21 

Campi Restaurant - 
Campbell & Coffey, Monuments 
Dixon & Elliott, Hardware 
Feliz, J. Sisto, Meat Market 
Flour Mill .... 

Fruit Cannery Co. 

Houts Auto (do. 

Hoyt Bros., Contractors 
Kennedy, B. D., Insurance 
Lawson-Rinner Optical (do. 

Levin Tanning Co. 

Mailer, J. C., Hardware Co. 

Moodey, R. C. & Son, Shoes 
National Ice Co. 

Noonan Meat Co. 

Pacific Telegraph & Telephone Co. 

Press Democrat Publishing Co. 

Republican Printing House 
Richardson’s Business College 
Rose City Market 
Rosenberg’s Department Store 
Santa Rosa Manufacturing Co. 

Santa Rosa Pioneer Laundry Co. 

Santa Rosa Woolen Mills 
Santa Rosa-Vallejo Tanning Co. 

Sullivan, P. Geo., Contracting Plumber 
St. Rose Drug Store 
Trembley & Co. Carriage Repository 
Townson, J. T„ Furniture 
Churches: 

Baptist - - - - 

Bethlehem Scandinavian Lutheran 
Christian - - 

Congregational 
Episcopal 


INDtX 


20 

- 105 
104 

77 

20 
100 

- 100 
89, 90 

63 

38 

71 

87 

- 23 
23 

- 30 
98 
106 

63 

70 

- 105 

34 

7 1 
97 
20 
22 
27 

- 34 
87 

'9 

20 

- 9i 
7i 

- 105 

32 

- 87 
7 1 
34 


57 

24 

17 

25 
- 44 


German Evangelical Lutheran - 24 

Methodist Episcopal 75 

Methodist Episcopal, South - - 75 

Methodist, German ... - 51 

Presbyterian - - - . . 52 

St. Rose [Catholic] - 60 

Unitarian -.25 

Depots - - - - - - - 56, 57 

Dr. Bogle’s Office and Laboratory - - 69 

Fruits, Flowers, Orchards - 12, 36. 37, 58, 86, 92 

FRATERNAL ORDERS: 

Canton Santa Rosa, I. O. O. F., - - 38 

Elks’ Club - - ... 62, 78 

Fraternal Order of Eagles - - 95 

Masonic Temple and Officers - - 93 

Native Sons’ Hall ----- 41 

HOTELS: 

Lebanon - -. 59 

Occidental - - - 19, 94 

Fetters’ Hotel ----- 99 

HOSPITALS: 

County Hospital ... - 91 

Katherine Sanitarium - - 91 

State Home, at Eldridge - - 28, 29 

Golden Gate Orphanage - 64, 83, 84, 85 

History - - - - - 7 , I 7 

Ocean, Rivers, Lakes - 26. 45, 47, 50, 61, 68, 97 

PUBLIC OFFICIALS: 

City ----- 4 

County - - - - 5 

Chamber of Commerce - - 6 

Public Library - - - - - 43 

Postoffice - - - - 42 

Residences - - - - 18, 35, 40, 50, 72 

SCHOOLS: 

High School - - - - 48, 66 

Fremont - - 54 , 55 , 67 

Lincoln - - - 67, 73 

Burbank - - - - 67, 76 

Roseland, South Park 74 

Daken’s Art School ... 39 

Streets - - - - - 82, 102, 104 








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Map of Santa Rosa Citv. Corrected to Date and Compiled Especially for This Book 







































































































































































































































































































































































COURT HOUSE, OF SONOMA 


COUNTY, at Santa Rosa, Cal., Nearing Completion 


3 



















































































~£^ V~cXP 0 fiGE -TT 




Coa«tt lrti«n 


C jw.nc'ilm*r\ 


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OFFICIALS OF SANTA ROSA CIT't 


4 
























































































































































F E.JJOWD 

ASSESSOR 


G. L. MURDOCK 

Treasurer 


F. L. WR/G-H/ 

Coo/vry ClER.N 


U K. SMITH 


2 ) 1 ST Arry 


LY VIA V GREEN 

S OPEN VISOR 2— D/s 7 


BLAIR HART 

SuPCftVlSOR I- Di$T 


H W AUSTIN 

CnAiPMAVj 3oSPP OF SuPfRWSORS 


THOS. C. BEN NT 
SuPCR.ON Ju: '■ - 


HIT SEATNLL 

Superior Judge 


F LBLACKBURA 7k WJTT MOMTG-OMER't Q H. WINKLER 

CoHOVCH _ Sl>PT. OF OCHOOlS. CoUMTE SuKVFYOR 


JJ MURRAY 


G HOYlE DONALD M e -1NTOSH L R BROOKE 

j,,V s.„r 4:rr. DcPurs SnenirF ■ . Depvri Suave vos 


W C. LINDS A, 


C. L.PATTESON 

Supervisor 4- t — List 


- SuPr. or Covstructiov y. 
So va»** Co. Cevifr Hoy** , 


Svf>CRV/SOR 5 


OFFICIALS OF SONOMA COUNTY 


5 





















{ 


OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS, CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 

From left to right (seated): Second Vice President Dawson Dixon, John Pinner, Pres.dent Ernest L.. 

(standing): M. Rosenberg, C. O. Dunbar, A. B. Lemmon, First Vice President Alfred Trembley, Treasurer J 


Finley, J. H. Einhorn, P. Levin; 
P. Overton, Secretary E. H. Brown 


6 









A BRIEF HISTORY OF SONOMA COUNTY AND SANTA ROSA 

COMPILED BY EDWARD H. BROWN, SECRETARY SANTA ROSA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 

SONOMA COUNTY AND ITS POSSIBILITIES 


HE widespread and almost insatiate desire which prevails 
throughout the older States, east of the Missouri River, 
and also in Europe, for concise, precise, complete and re¬ 
liable information concerning California, has been met to 
some extent by the publication of descriptions of several of 
the counties of the Golden State. So far, however, com¬ 
paratively little has been done in this direction in the interest of Sonoma—- 
the acknowledged Banner County of California. A score of other counties, 
south, middle and north, have scattered broadcast their glowing invitations 
to come, see and settle in their several districts. Old 
Sonoma offers the most inviting claims for consid¬ 
eration, for those who are seeking homes on the 
hospitable shores of the Pacific. 

Of Sonoma we can truly say, “If you come and 
will examine its magnificent and multifarious 
products ; if you will travel with observing eyes and 
open ears through its main and minor valleys; if 
you will dig into the deep, rich, black soil of its 
plains, and also into the rich, brown, alluvial lying 
on the easy slopes of its hillsides; if you will study 
its temperature, its rainfalls and its vital statistics; 
if you will visit its public and private schools and 
collegiate institutions ; if you are an admirer of the 
beauties of Nature; if you want your money’s 
worth of fertile land, where you can build a home 
worthy of the name, and where the mere function 
of living is a constant enjoyment; if you will come 
to Sonoma and do what we invite you to do—you 
will surely cast your lot with the people of this fav¬ 
ored county. 

As will be seen by reading this work and scan¬ 
ning the varied pictures, true to Nature and painted 
by the most faithful of all artists, the sun, Sonoma 
County is too large to be seen in all its fullness in a 
day or a week or by traveling from point to point 
in a railroad car. Of all the counties in California none other offers to-day 
such great inducements to capitalists, large or small, to active brains and 
willing hands as the county to which it is our purpose to invite you. In 
every interest and every industry now existing in Sonoma, labor, as well as 
capital, is better rewarded than in any other county of this, the most pros¬ 
perous State in the Union. For beautifully located, pleasant, happy, peace¬ 
ful homes, Sonoma cannot be excelled. How can it be otherwise where Na¬ 
ture has been so lavish in her gifts, has adorned herself in her most pic¬ 


turesque forms, and painted her landscapes in her most splendid colors, 
where the forests are magnificent and the soil so rich and varied that the 
harvest, whether it be that of the forester, the farmer, the vineyardist, the 
orchardist, the dairyman or the stock-raiser, is so liberal that with ordinary 
diligence and prudence any man can grow rich? How can it be otherwise? 
There are neither blizzards nor cyclones, sunstrokes nor disastrous thunder 
storms nor cloudbursts. 

Here epidemics are unknown and zymotic and pulmonary diseases are 
shorn of their terrors. The heats of summer are never enfeebling, the nights 

after the warmest days are always refreshingly 
cool, frosts in forty years have only once wilted 
flowering shrubs that even in the Middle States and 
Sothern Atlantic States are only half hardy. And 
ever since American occupation—when authenti¬ 
cated records began—there have been on the aver¬ 
age, except on some of the slopes and in certain of 
the valleys facing the coast, two hundred and fifty 
clear, bright days and three hundred fair days out of 
every three hundred and sixty-five in each revolv¬ 
ing year. 

From all the East there comes a constant de¬ 
mand for literature that tells of this land of ours. 
Every prominent man receives frequent letters 
from people in the East, who have seen his name 
in the papers and who write to him just on the 
strength of that, asking for information of Cal¬ 
ifornia and of Sonoma county. Partly to meet such 
demands as these this portfolio is compiled. Of 
course, its details are meager and its space is lim¬ 
ited, but within its bounds it gives a general view 
of Imperial Sonoma. It pictures are photogravures 
of things that are, and its text is but a brief sketch 
of the most important and most prominent features 
of the county and its towns. 

There is no effort at extended detail, and there 
is careful avoidance of exaggeration. The book’s chief purpose is to awaken 
in crest that will lead the reader to seek better knowledge and closer ac¬ 
quaintance with Sonoma county and with Sonoma county’s people, and with 
the opportunities offered to homeseekers. 

We are not unmindful that some years ago there was published a fuller 
h' 'ory of the early days of American settlement in Sonoma than we now 
at 4 erupt to give, and also another work known as the Historical Atlas of 
foil ma County and Santa Rosa, its Capital, but these were intended by the 




EDWARD H. BROWN 


7 



























authors for the information and use of those residing in the county, tathei 
: than for general circulation in other States. The Hon. Robert A. 1 hompson 
''wrote much on the subject of Sonoma and its county seat, and from 
time to time other local writers and the daily press of Santa Rosa and San 
Francisco have sought to describe the beauty, fertility and productive qual¬ 
ities of this county. But while these efforts have been fairly faithful and 
more or less full of interest regarding the localities they describe, none was 
designed on so large, complete, graphic and artistic a scale as the work Mr. 
Darms is now offering to the public. 

A ten-thousand edition of nearly one hundred pages, however, is hardly 
adequate to present this remarkable county in its true light to those who 
are seeking information about California, because, first, the county is so full 
of features worth describing at more length, and ten thousand magazines, 
even though they may pass through several hands, cannot reach one in five 
hundred of those of the 88.000.000 citizens of the United States to whom 
Hie information we give might be valuable as well as interesting. 

Santa Rosa Township is in the heart of the County of Sonoma. It ex¬ 
tends from the summit of the high range separating Napa from Sonoma 
'County across the great central valley of Santa Rosa to the Laguna, which 
is its western boundary. On the north it is bounded by Knight’s V alley and 
Russian River Township, on the south by Petaluma, Vallejo and Sonoma 
Townships. It has a larger proportion of level than of hill land, and a num¬ 
ber of beautiful subsidiary valleys tributary to the main valley. 

Early History of Sonoma County 

The honor of giving the beautiful name of Santa Rosa to this section is 
due to Father Juan Amoroso, the founder of the Mission of San Rafael. This 
zealous priest, on the 30th day of August, 1829, was in this region on a pros¬ 
elyting expendition, in company with one Jose Cantua. He was driven off 
by the hostile Indians while in the act of conferring upon a young Indian 
woman the rite of baptism. The priest and his companion took hurriedly to 
their horses and fled with all possible speed down the valley, escaping their 
pursuers. It being the day on which the Church celebrated the Feast of 
Santa Rosa de Lima, Father Amoroso named the stream from that circum¬ 
stance. The valley then came to be called after the stream, the Valley of 
Santa Rosa, fortunately one of the most beautiful of all California names, 
as its original was one of the most beautiful characters in the calendar of 
American Saints. 

It is related of Father Amoroso, who must have had some poetry as well 
as piety in his nature, that he named the horse which bore him so swiftly 
over the plain, “Centella,” meaning, in the English vernacular, “Lightning." 
All honor to the gallant friar and his companion, Jose, to whose courageous 
spirit we owe the legacy which this expedition left us—the name of Santa 
Rosa! 

The first settlement was made, and the first furrow was turned in Santa 
Rosa Township by a plucky young Irishman, whose name was John T. 



OLD ADOBE NEAR 5ANTA R05A 

Read. He was born in Dublin in 1805. He had an uncle who was a seafar¬ 
ing man. Young Read left Ireland at the age of fifteen years, bound upon a 
voyage to Mexico. He sailed from Acapulco for California and reached this 
State in 1826, just after he had attained his majority. He settled in Sausa- 
lito, and applied for a grant there, but failed to get it on the ground that 
the’land was wanted for the use of the Government. He was not discour¬ 
aged, nor was he timid. He came into what is now Sonoma County and 
made the first settlement outside the Mission at Sonoma. Moreover, he was 
the first English-speaking settler in the county, and was the first Irishman 
who settled anywhere in the State. He made application in 1827 for a giant 
of his settlement, which was in the vicinity of what was afterward the resi¬ 
dence of Mr. Robert Crane, but before he could perfect it the Indians drove 
him off, burning his crop of wheat and all his improvements. He was set 
back, but not disheartened. Soon after this disaster he engaged with Padre 
Quivas as major-domo of San Rafael. In 1832 he went to reside in Sausa- 
lito, and sailed a small craft between the peninsula and San Francisco—the 
first ferry established on the bay or in the State of California. 

The next settlement in Santa Rosa Township was in Los Guilicos Val¬ 
ley by Don Juan Wilson, the grantee of Los Guilicos Rancho. The next 
and the first permament settler in the neighborhood of the present town of 
Santa Rosa was Senora Ygnacia Lopez de Carrillo. This lady came upon 
the invitation of General Vallejo, as a colonist from San Diego, about the 
time of the Hijar Colonization scheme. She reached Sonoma in 1837, re¬ 
sided there one year, and came to Santa Rosa. 

Senora Carrillo was a woman of more than average courage and energy, 
as is proven by her settlement on the frontier, in the midst of hostile Indians. 
She had a large family—five boys and seven girls—and she carved for them 













out of the wilderness—but a beauti¬ 
ful wilderness it was—a local habita¬ 
tion and a home. That she had good 
taste and judgment as well as cour¬ 
age and industry is evidenced by her 
choice of Santa Rosa, when all the 
valleys of this county were open to 
occupation. This pioneer mother of 
Santa Rosa died in 1849, and her 
estate was divided among her chil¬ 
dren. All of the site of the present 
City of Santa Rosa was included in 
the boundaries of the grant made lo 
Senora Carrillo. 

It is said that at the time of the 
occupation of the valley by Senora 
Carrillo there were three thousand 
Indians living in the neighborhood 
of the present city. The principal 
rancheria was on the Smith farm, 
just below the bridge, at the cross¬ 
ing of Santa Rosa creek, on the road 
leading to Sebastopol, a town seven 
miles from Santa Rosa. Upon this 
site a Mission was commenced, prob¬ 
ably by Father Amoroso, whose zeal 
in the cause of Christianity kept him 
always on the debatable line between the natives and a “gente de razon," as 
the Californians were called, or called themselves. 

The Indians rose up and destroyed the incipient Mission buildings at 
about the same time that the Mission of Sonoma was devastated. There 
was not one adobe left. Julio Carrillo said that when he came, in 1838, the 
marks where the building stood were plainly discernible. 

There was nothing of interest connected with this section from 1841 to 
1846, when, on the 14th day of June, the revolt in Sonoma began, which 
was to terminate only with the transfer of the sovereignty of the whole of 
Alta California to the United States, which, with a rapidity unequaled in the 
history of the world, had extended her frontier, in fifty years, from the 
Alleghany mountains to the Pacific Ocean. 

After the raising of the Bear Flag, two men volunteered to go from 
Sonoma to Russian river for some powder, which, it was said, Moses Carson 
had at that place. These two men, whose names were Cowie and Fowler, 
were captured by Juan Padillo, who had charge of a band of marauders and 
had taken possession of Senora Carrillo’s residence, the old adobe on Mrs. F. 
G. Hahman’s farm, near Santa Rosa. 

The two unfortunate men were captured and taken up the valley, above 
the County Farm, where they were shot. Their bodies were mutilated, 
thrown into a stream, and lightly covered with brush, a prey for the wolf 


and the coyote. A charitable Indian named Chanate, less savage than the 
slayers of poor Cowie and Fowler, went up and told Moses Carson of the 
condition of the bodies, and he came down and buried them beneath a pine 
tree. 

After the organization of the State government, this part of the country 
slowly increased in population. None realized at this early day that the 
agricultural wealth of the State would be far greater than the gold drift of 
the dead and buried rivers on the slopes of the Sierras. 

Geography and Topography. 

Santa Rosa Township contains an area equal to fifteen square miles, 
about 130,000 acres of land, one-half of which is rich alluvial soil, occupying 
the center of the great central valley of Sonoma County. The bottom lands 
are of unsurpassed fertility, suited to the growth of wheat, corn, oats, rye, 
barley, hops, and especially for stone and seed fruit culture. The remaining 
lands in the township may be classed as hill, foothill and tributary valley 
land—the latter meaning a number of valleys, of greater or less extent, 
tributary to the central valley. In each of the smaller valleys there is allu¬ 
vial soil along the water courses and sandy soil in the foothills, which are 
largely devoted to grape culture. In these valleys and upon the surrounding 


9 









VIEW FROM RIISCON PARK 

hill lands are located the best of the celebrated vineyards of Sonoma Comity. 
Nowhere else is the planting of the vine so rapidly increasing as on lane s o 

this class 

In some respects the climate is perhaps better in these than in the main 
valley, which, being lower, catches more frost in winter and is more exposed 
to the fog and sea breezes of summer. But for staple crops and hardy fruits 
prunes plums, pears, apples, cherries and berries, the rich alluvial of t 
bottom is especially adapted. The two locations combine conditions rarefy 
met in the same locality, covering a wide range of agricultural products 
from the gross feeding, hardy staples to the most delicate of the fruit and 

nut trees, including apricot, almond, olive and walnut. 

The valleys tributary to Santa Rosa are Los Gmlicos, Bennett, Green, 

ARvander Knights, Franz, Sonoma and Rincon. 

The first of these, Los Guilicos, is on the southerly fork of Santa 
Rosa Creek It is one of the most beautiful locations in the State. Hood 
Mountain overlooks it. At the base of this peak is the celebrated Los Gu.l- 

' C ° S Bem, e eu r Vallev is a beautiful valley tributary to Santa Rosa. It has an 
average length of seven miles and is from two and one-half to three miles ill 
width° Matanzas creek, which drains Bennett Valley, empties into Santa 


Rosa creek, the junction of the two streams being almost at the cen 
the Citv of Santa Rosa. South of the town, the range which separates Ben¬ 
nett Valley from Santa Rosa Valley appears. It is a spur of the ma 
Sonoma range. This ridge is of open land of considerable value, firs*, 
cause the soil is good, and next, because it lies just within the warm 

and is exempt from frost. v ,, 

Green Valley lies ten miles west of Santa Rosa on the Gieen y 

creek. It is a beautiful, rich, fertile valley where the grass and trees are 
green all the year round. The valley slopes gently up to the Gold Ridge 

fruit belt on both sides. 

Green Valley has a delightful climate, a rich, warm, sandy, easily-worked 
loam soil that will raise, at a profit, any crop that can be raised in Northern 
California, and with absolutely no irrigation. This applies to all Sonoma 
County, the moisture being drawn to the surface by cultivation. Even dur¬ 
ing the dry part of the season one can go into any orchard, vineyard or gar¬ 
den that is cultivated and dig up the moist soil with the toe of the shoe. 
This is the reason why berries of all kinds grow so luxuriantly and profit¬ 
ably. The largest and best blackberry farm in the State is located in Green 

Valley. 

Alexander, Knights and Franz Valleys are north of San Rosa. In these 




















VILW FROM CITY RL5LRVOIR 

valleys some of the finest fruit in Sonoma County is raised, and nearly every 

farmer raises a large flock of chickens. 

Sonoma Valley lies east of Santa Rosa, near Los Guilicos \ alley. This 
valley is like all of the other valleys surrounding Santa Rosa, rich in soil, 
producing immense crops of all products mentionable. 

The Rincon lies north of Santa Rosa Creek, and is about two miles m 
width and from three and a half to four miles in length. The climate is mild 
and the soil is well adapted to grape and fruit culture. It is becoming 
quite a favorable location for fruit and vine culture. The celebrated Wells 
vineyards are on the hills at the head of the Rincon Valley. These constitute 
one of the very best plantations in Sonoma County. 

From the summit of Rincon Heights, about six miles from the city, the 
view is one of extraordinary beauty. The roofs of the taller houses and 


church steeples show up through the trees in which the city is embossed. 
The great plain of Santa Rosa extends north and south of the city for a dis¬ 
tance of twenty-five miles. Scattered groves of oak grow over the plain, 
giving an artistic finish to the landscape. On the west the view is arrested 
by the Coast Range, which is covered by immense redwood forests extend¬ 
ing to the coast, where the restless sea leaps and falls back with unceasing 
moan. 

Berry Culture in Sonoma. 

Santa Rosa has near her borders one of the largest Loganberry fields in 
the world. The soil of Sonoma County is peculiarly adapted to the culture 
and growth of berries and large fruits, and there is a large opening for the 


II 


















ROSL5 


PLACH BLOSSOMS 


12 













CORN ON THE, 5MITH FARM, ALEXANDER VALLLY 

growth of blackberries, raspberries, currants, gooseberries, strawberries, 
Loganberries, peaches, prunes, pears, cherries, apples, oranges, lemons, wal¬ 
nuts, olives, apicots, almonds, quinces, figs, nectarines and plums. 

Mammoth Blackberries. 

This berry is much in demand and yields heavily. It is a large berry and 
has unusual keeping qualities. 1 he consumption is fai greatei than the 
production. The gross profit is about $500 to the acre. The cost of picking 
is about $100 per acre. Very often they are sold on the vine. Santa Rosa 
produces all the small fruits. We have never known of a ciop failuie. 

Blackberries. 

These are one of our early producers and are raised while the orchard is 

maturing. . 

The favorites, known as the Lawton Blacks, are raised with little caie and 

yield three to four tons per acre. The cost of picking amounts to about $15 

per ton and the market price is $50 per ton 

Santa Rosa Excels in Apples. 

This vicinity is known for its favorable climatic conditions for the raising 
of apples. Almost every varety is raised in this section at a profit. As an 
early apple the Gravenstein has great qualities. It is one of the first on 
the market; it is a good keeper; it is of unusual size, and as a dried apple 


1 



FRUIT DRYING IN 50N0MA COUNTY 

there is no better. This apple is beautiful to look at, as well as profitable to 
raise. 

Apples from Sonoma County are shipped to nearly every country on the 
globe. Australia is a steady customer, and Sonoma apples are also in the 
London markets every year, as well as in those of New York and other 
Eastern American cities. 

Mr. N. A. Griffith, who lives near Santa Rosa, sold his 25 acres of Grav¬ 
enstein apples in 1908011 the trees for $5,000, and this was no exceptional year. 

Santa Rosa raises the Rome Beautiful, Bellefleur, Baldwin, Greening, 
Gloria, Mundi, Newtown Pippin and many other varieties. 

Prunes and Peaches. 

It is estimated that $1,000,000 per year is derived from prunes and peaches 
in Sonoma County. With reasonable attention prunes and peaches will net 
$225 per acre. 

Local canneries handle the bulk of the peach crop, and most of the prunes 
are cured and packed in this neighborhood. 

Chickens are raised in our prune and peach orchards. The trees serve 
the chickens as a shelter from the sun and the chickens serve the trees as 
exterminators of insects. 

The Grape Industry. 


According to the report of the County Assessor, Santa Rosa is sur- 























PACKING APPLES AT N. A. GRIFFITH’S ORCHARD 


rounded by 22.000 acres of bearing grape vines, in Sonoma County, and 
2,365 not yet come into bearing. 

Santa Rosa has numerous wineries, and it is estimated that the grape 
crop last year for Sonoma County was nearly 40,000 tons, which brought the 
growers something like a million dollars. This represents a vintage of 
about 5,500,000 gallons of wine, or a total of $1,375-000 more for the 
county. Naturally, the greater part of these amounts is paid out among 
the local residents for labor and material. 

Ideal Gardening. 

Strawberries grow everywhere. Every farmer has his strawberry beds 
and considers them one of the many creators of income for Ins home. Straw- 

berries will net from $250 to $300 per acre. 

' Vegetable gardening is carried on the year round, and home-grown vege¬ 
tables & can be had for the table any month of the year. Five to forty acres 
may be bought at a reasonable price on most any terms desired. 

No Irrigating Ditches Here. 

Sonoma County has never had an irrigating ditch in its history of more 
than sixty years. Nothing of that kind is required here or even thought of. 
No record of a crop failure is recorded in the history of the county. People 
do not purchase water rights in Sonoma County and have the land given 
them, as is done in some sections. The first purchase of land here is all that 


is required. 1 
water service, 
ditches. 


c tn be oaid out annually for water rents and 
here are no sums to be >£* ° extending irrigating 

and no assessments tor ai^gmt, 


Cherries in Profusion. 


In cherries we have no equal ^ as ^ averag - e s i ze , is as large as 

One cherry, known as ie ^ This cherry’s flavor is very 

the Eastern plum and has a T 

delicious, and its raising ^ very P r ° ^ t {or his crop of ten acres. Upon 
I„ 1908, Mr. F. Meyer rece. ved fr J one tree of cherries 

r^e ye C a a r S10n Th a e S Yetw Buftner and the Biach Tartarian both yieid 
heavilv and are very profitable. 

Hops a Big Industry. 

Sonoma County harvested 5 . 3«3 acres of hops last year. This is one of 
the lamest interests of Sonoma County, and “Sonomas are the basts of p 
market quotations throughout the world. The crop from the acreage 
reached over 38,000 bales of about .85 pounds each or a t°‘al of 7 ,4<x>,ooo 
pounds for the year’s crop Over $30,000 was paid out for gathering th 
crop. The most of these hops were grown in the immediate vicmitj 

Santa Rosa. 

The hop harvest generally lasts throughout the month of September, with 
about one week of August and one week of October. It is a busy season 

in Sonoma County. 

The Petrified Forest. 


Thirteen miles from Santa Rosa there is a petrified forest. Forty-five 
acres of this large tract is one mass of petrified trees.. Some of them are 
twenty-four feet in circumference and 200 to 300 feet in length. This trip 
out of Santa Rosa is an unusual treat to those who admire Nature’s curios¬ 
ities. The drive is over good roads, through a picturesque country of val¬ 
leys and hills. 

Minerals of Sonoma County. 

Sonoma County is one of the mineral-bearing counties of the State open¬ 
ing upon the Bay of San Francisco; not dependent, however, upon the out¬ 
put of her mines, but rather upon her agricultural and horticultural products. 

Quicksilver is the most important mineral in the county. There are oc¬ 
currences of gold and silver, as well as scattered deposits of iron, coal, mag- 
nese, magesite, mineral paint, chromates, garnets, clays, cement deposits and 
structural materials. 

Santa Rosa White Sulphur Springs and California Geysers. 

Santa Rosa has one of the finest sulphur springs to be found in the State. 
It is known as Santa Rosa White Sulphur Springs, and the water is highly 
beneficial for rheumatism, as well as kidney and liver troubles. The springs 












STONE. TREE IN PETRIFIED FOREST. I I H Feet in Diameter, 65 Feet Long 

15 


















RAISING CHICKENS IN SONOMA COUNTY 

are about two miles from the city and overlook the whole Santa Rot,a V al 
ley and the mountains on both sides, east and west. There are hundreds o 
valuable mineral springs scattered throughout Sonoma County. In the 
northeastern part of the county are the famous California Geysers, w ic 
rival the Yellowstone Geysers in wildness and wierdness of scenery, which 
have attracted attention the world over. 

The Growing of Walnuts. 

Santa Rosa will not take second place with any city in the State in the 
growing of walnuts. Mrs. E. M. Vrooman has a fifty-five-acre walnut or¬ 
chard on the outskirts of the city wihch contains too grafted Franquette 
walnut trees eight years old, and regarding their fruitfulness she says: 

“In 1901, when the orchard was three years old, I gathered 82 pounds of 
walnuts, and the crop each year since has been as follows: 1903, 3,700 
pounds; 1904, 6,000 pounds; 1905, 12,325 pounds; 1906, 24,314 pounds, 1907, 
46,409 pounds; 1908, 90,205 pounds.” This land sold for $200 an acre a few 
years ago; to-day it is worth $1,000 an acre. 

A Great Poultry Center. 

Sonoma County is the greatest poultry and egg producing center in the 
world, and the climate in the vicinity of Santa Rosa is particularly suited 
to that line of business. The raising of fruit in no way interferes with the 
raising of poultry. In fact, the shade of the trees and the freshly culti¬ 
vated & soil are a great help. The poultry business is absolutely sure to be 
profitable if you give it your intelligent attention. Santa Rosa is second to 

none in this industry. 

Santa Rosa—the Largest City North of the Bay. 

Santa Rosa, the capital of Sonoma County, is the center of one of the 
richest districts in the great State of California. The soil of the district 


.reduces abundantly all the crops grown out of the tropical regiom It is a 
plendid municipality, with a population of about 12,500, and is a c y 
ommercial importance and first-class hotels. 

Fifty miles north of San Francisco is this beautiful City of Roses in a 
liohlv fertile valley. Two steam roads and one electric railway enter Santa 


Municipal Water System. 

"Santa Rosa is the first city in the United States to furnish water free to 
inhabitants. An ample supply has been developed for twenty-five thousand 
people. This water flows in an underground river bed, and is pure and cool. 
Electric pumps have been installed to force the water into an immense 
reservoir, from which it flows through the city’s excellent system of distrib¬ 
uting pipes to the homes of the poorest as well as the richest resident. This 
experiment of supplying water to all at public expense has been watched 
with interest everywhere. 

A City of Churches. 

Santa Rosa has the following churches: Presbyterian, Congregational, 
Catholic, Methodist, German Lutheran, German Methodist, Adventist, Holi¬ 
ness, Southern Methodist, Christian, Episcopal, Unitarian, Swedish Lutheran 
and Baptist. Besides these there are the Salvation Army, Chinese Mission, 
Theosophical Society, Christian Science, Free Methodist denomination and 
Peniel Gospel Mission, etc. 


School Advantages. 


Santa Rosa has six grammar schools, with thirty-one teachers, and a high 
school with nine instructors. Santa Rosa, as well as the county, has as effi¬ 
cient a corps of teachers as will be found anywhere in the United States. The 
value of school property in the county aggregates $445,698, of which $373,080 


16 

















~~1 


S.A.//S 116? B AS KET BALLTEA M. 


G-ermah methooist churc h 


FIRST CHRISTIAN OttV&ClI 


REV. PETEK COLVIN Pastor. 


inULUWare UeiUCakU Coope. Iv^VUr^- 

c, pj (_| 5 IHoS. flasket Balt Team 


AlVarbovi* Nellie Lone ■'•jfa" LeiLi Ov-ove 


C Him ft AH C HO RCji &■$ 0 KOA t SCHOOL. 


Ireme. IV 4 RBofs Mr. Perrier iCoachi Nellie Lone.roam 
LILY Lewis Idahaiuie r)urnsuM*EH mercrretLoner a an 

Cecile Cable Minnie Cooper CrpT MRRJome Con e. 


Santa Rosa High School Basket Ball Teams 


German Methodist Church Christian Church and Sunday School 


17 


































































Residence of Edwin Reynolds 
Residence of Cornelius Shea 


18 


Residence of Mayor J. H. Gray 
Residence of M. Doyle 






















OCC/DENTAL MOTEL,<5ANTA KOJA CAL. 


OCCIDENTAL HOTEL 

(Interior shown on page 94) 

is in the lots and buildings, $50,578 in libraries, and $22,040 in apparatus. The 
schools are open ten months in the year, with a few exceptions, and accred¬ 
ited graduates of the high schools are admitted to the L niversity of California 
and to Leland Stanford Junior University without examinations. 

Santa Rosa has two fine business colleges, which are largely attended 
and which draw their patronage from all parts of the State. Still another 
educational institution is the Ursuline College, conducted by the Lrsuline 
Sisters in connection with St. Roses Catholic Church and parish. I here aie 
a number of private schools scattered throughout the county. 

Fraternal Orders. 


Santa Rosa has the following fraternal orders: Masonic, including Blue 
Lodge, Royal Arch Chapter, Commandery, Scottish Rite, Eastern Star Chap¬ 
ter and Amaranth; Odd Fellows, including Subordinate Lodge, Encamp¬ 
ment, Canton and Rebekahs; the Elks, Young Men’s Institute, the Independ¬ 
ent Order of Foresters, Foresters of America, United Workmen, Woodmen 
of the World, Patrons of Husbandry, Native Sons, Native Daughters, Druids, 
Knights of Honor, Grand Army of the Republic, Ladies’ Circle, Good Temp- 
lars, National Union, German S. L. and B., Hermann Sons, Knights of 
Pythias, Improved Order of Red Men, Degree of Pocahontas, Fraternal 
Brotherhood, Americans, Woman’s Relief Corps, Eagles, Owls, Modern 
Woodmen of America, the Royal Neighbors of America, Women of Wood¬ 
craft, Royal Arcanum, and all labor organizations. 


Santa Rosa Sewer System. 

The city is equipped with a splendid system, and it has a large sewer 
farm west of the city, where all sewage is disposed of by the septic tank 



ROSENBERG’S DRY GOODS STORE, Fourth and B Streets 


process. This is the latest invention of science in the handling of sewage, 
and Santa Rosa was the pioneer city in the adoption of the method. Since 
that time the septic tank process, as constructed here, has been inspected 
by officers from many cities in this state and from other states. A\ hen its 
workings had been seen, most of the other cities installed similar plants. 


Business Investments. 

I 

Agricultural lands of established productive ability offer the safest and 
most certain opportunities for legitimate business investments. Santa Rosa, 
California, is in the midst of one of the greatest agricultural regions of the 
United States. Here can be grown a greater variety of plant life than in any 
other part of the country. 

Plant life reaches a higher state of perfection in this section than in any 
other portion of the United States. Agricultural lands in this section are 
steadily increasing in value, and they may be purchased at prices and terms 
which will permit of a good profit. 

California is the Mecca of the homeseeker—the man who desires to make 
his home in a land free from cyclones, blizzards, hurricanes, freezing cold in 
winter and blasting heat in summer, and where the soil will respond to his 
energies without irrigation. There are thousands of families in this vicinity 
who are not only makng a good living on from five to forty acres of land, 
but are also laying aside money enough to make them independent. Any 
family may do this by putting the same amount of enthusiasm and enter- 
price into caring for their place that they would put into any other busi¬ 
ness. There are many small places still awaiting the settler, which offer 
ideal conditions for the tiller of the soil. Santa Rosa offers opportunities 
for the investor—both large and small—that are not equalled in any other 
part of the country. These investments, because of their nature, are safe, 
certain and profitable. 


19 






















Exchange Bank, Fourth and Mendocino Sts., M. Doyle, President 



Union Trust-Savings Bank, Fourth Street and Exchange Avenue 


20 


Pacific Telegraph and Telephone Co.’s Building, Third Street 



Santa Rosa Manufacturing Co., Cabinet Shop and Planing Mill, Phone 574 

Office and Mill, 115-121 Fifth Street. H. E. Huntington, E. Schmalenbach C. B. Kobes 

































































LUTHLR BURBANK 



BURBANK’S HOME, 


Sonoma County is eighth in the assessed valuation in the State of Cal 
ifornia, and increased in the past seven years over six million dollars in as 
sessed valuation. 


Manufacturing Opportunities. 

Santa Rosa offers many openings for investment of capital, and will 
welcome all who come to establish manufacturing plants of any nature. At 
present there are fruit canneries, fruit packing and drying houses, tanneries 
and a shoe factory; numerous wineries, marble works, nurseries, machine 
shops, foundries, planing mills, box factories, woolen mills, glove factory 
and several sash and door factories. 

As an inducement to progressive manufacturing plants, the Santa Rosa 
Chamber of Commerce offers building sites free of charge. 

Newspapers. 

Santa Rosa has two eight-page daily newspapers—the Press Democrat 
and Santa Rosa Republican—each representing the political party its name 
indicates. Each issues a semi-weekly edition and there is a large number 
of weeklies throughout the county. 

Santa Rosa’s Fast Horses. 

Santa Rosa is the home of the fastest trotting horses in the world, Lou 
Dillon and Sonoma Girl, both having been born and raised here. It has 
been the work of this noble creature—Lou Dillon—-this noblest of God s 
animals—to give Sonoma a record high up in the scale of excellence. Lou 
Dillon has carried the name and the victorious colors of her nativity before 
all others. 

Wherever that unbeaten 1158 1-2 flashes over the mile circle, Santa Rosa 
is known. 

Sonoma Girl, 2:051-2, carries in her blue veins a few drops of the 
noble McClelland blood. 


Twenty Years’ Rainfall Recorded By Months. 


Year 

j July 

j Aug, 

Sept. 

Oct. 

Nov. 

Dec. 

Jan. 

Feb. 

Mar. 

Apr. 

May 

June j 

Ann’l 

1889-90 


none 

none 

8 78 

4.39 

15.94 

12.85 

4.74 

6.15 

1.82 

1.40 

none 

56.06 

^ 90-91 
1891-92 


none 

.20 

none 

none 

3.93 

1.24 

10.49 

1.22 

2.39 

1.23 

none 

20.71 

.75 

none 

.20 

.20 

1.50 

8.64 

3.43 

5:07 

4.14 

2.65 

3.78 

none 

30.36 

1892-93 


none 

none 

1.44 

3.37 

6.55 

4.13 

5.56 

6.59 

2.07 

.80 

none 

30.51 

1893-94 


none 

.25 

.52 

4.82 

2.61 

9.61 

3.78 

1.31 

1.08 

1.84 

1.30 

27.12 

1894-95 


none 

1.50 

2.55 

.89 

13.14 

18.42 

3.35 

2.94 

1.35 

1.39 

none 

45.53 

1805-96 

.33 

none 

1.48 

none 

1.83 

2.95 

10.57 

.69 

3.53 

4.70 

1.45 

none 

27.53 

18 >6-97 


none 

.46 

1.50 

5.09 

6.42 

2.27 

6.25 

5.50 

1.03 

.57 

.83 

29.92 

1897-98 


none 

.10 

1.88 

2.18 

3.16 

1.81 

5:32 

.56 

.38 

3 32 

.17 

18.98 

1898-99 


none 

.62 

1.07 

1.16 

1.20 

8.77 

none 

8.57 

.67 

2.09 

none 

24.15 

1899-00 


.15 

none 

5.94 

5 44 

4.78 

4.98 

.77 

3.72 

2.83 

.60 

.16 

29.37 

1900-01 


none 

none 

4.41 

5.60 

3.35 

6.05 

5,95 

.90 

3.31 

1.12 

no ne 

30.69 

1901-02 


none 

1.17 

1.16 

4.22 

2.25 

1.79 

14.40 

4.54 

2.61 

1.79 

no ne 

33.93 

19 >2-03 


trace 

none 

3.70 

5.00 

4.43 

6.38 

2.58 

6.40 

.60 

trace 

.03 

29.12 

1903-04 


trace 

trace 

.64 

9 65 

3.59 

1.77 

12.23 

12.93 

2.99 

.24 

.07 

44.11 

140 '-05 



4.39 

4.60 

2.74 

4.50 

5.53 

4.26 

5.59 

1,45 

2.93 

none 

35.yy 

1905-06 



trace 

trace 

1.97 

1.81 

10.95 

5.24 

7.95 

.72 

3.31 

1.23 

33.18 

1906-07 


none 

.16 

none 

1.88 

6 79 

7.57 

5.17 

11.21 

.34 

.32 

1 00 

34.44 

1907- 08 

1908- 09 

n ne 
.02 

none 

n*ne 

.46 

trace 

.87 

1.34 

.13 

2.12 

6.30 

4.00 

5,61 

5.88 

1,45 

.30 

.85 

.08 

20.93 


21 




























(Jfmkal \| 

VIEW OF I 
PEESSSJDFjM 


\7HFMNG 
'iPPTJt FOK 
8/ND1NG 


Bi/sinese 

Office 


Paper 

^Machinery 


[£D/TORIAL ' 
\ DEPARTMENT i 


In The 

BINDERY 


Press Democrat Building!} 


The 

Cylinder 
, PRESSES 


if Book anP 
QcIob Presses j 


(MERGfflHAIER 
, Typesetting] 
\ Machine h 


' Composing 
.deparwen. 


THt PRE55 DEMOCRAT PLANT 


22 









































SANTA ROSA FLOUR MILLS 


The Home of Luther Burbank. 

The fact that the world’s greatest horticultural experiments and plant 
scientist has selected Santa Rosa and Sonoma County for his home and 
work speaks more for the soil and climate than all that can be written. With 
all the United States to select from, and all of California seeking him as a 
resident, Mr. Burbank is willing to stake his life’s work and reputation on 
what he can accomplish in and around Santa Rosa. It is here that he 
propagated the spineless cactus, the Shasta daisy, the plumcot, the white 
blackberry, the improved peach plum, the stoneless prune, the pineapple 
quince and many other equally wonderful creations. 

The Banks of Santa Rosa. 

There are five banks in Santa Rosa: The Santa Rosa National, the Sav¬ 
ings Bank of Santa Rosa, the Santa Rosa Bank, the Union Trust Savings 
Bank and the Exchange Bank. The total assets of these institutions January, 
1909, were $6,205,654, a gain of $1,086,595 over January 1, 1908. 

Sonoma County’s assessment for 1908 was as follows: 

» d'r 1 ( Ar'n 


Real estate, other than town lots.$ I 4»374T5Q 

Improvements on same . 4 > 5 l 3 A 35 

Real estate, city and town lots. 3,988,625 

Improvements on same . 4 d° U 35 

Personal property . 3 > 7 ’ 9 30 

Money and solvent credits. 5 2 9 > 55 ° 

Railroads, per the State Board. 2,678,163 


Total assessment.$ 33 ’ 8 ° 9 > 9 l 8 


Santa Rosa Postoffice. 

Santa Rosa has been given an appropriation by the Federal Government 
of about $70,000 for a postoffice, which is now under construction. 

The continually increasing receipts of Santa Rosa postoffice,_ year by 
year despite fires, disasters, financial panics and hard times, indicate the 
prosperity and growth of the city under any and all circumstances. Each 
year in the history of the postoffice shows an increase of business. Going 



CALIFORNIA FRUIT FANNERS’ ASSOCIATION 

back for five years, we learn that in the fiscal year 1904-5 the receipts were 
$20,425. The next year they were $23,686. The year of 1906-7 brought 
them up to $26,012. In the fiscal year 1907-8 the amount was $26,940. The 
year just closed saw a postoffice business of $27,967. 



SANTA ROSA’S FIRST MAYOR 

Conspicuous among the well-known and highly-esteemed citizens of 
Santa Rosa, Sonoma County, was Hon. Edward Neblett, 

During the thirty-five years 
that he resided in this city he was 
identified with its progress and 
advancement as one of the projec¬ 
tors and promoters of many of its 
more important beneficial enter¬ 
prises, and took an active part in 
its financial and political strug¬ 
gles. Kind-hearted, generous and 
ever ready to contribute freely to 
individual or to public needs, he 
endeared himself to a large circle 
of friends, who reverenced and re¬ 
spected him. Physically, he was 
a man of fine presence, tall and 
straight as an Indian, and his 
mental vigor was unimpaired to 
the last. Courteous and affable 
in manner, of a royal and unsel¬ 
fish nature, he was a typical rep¬ 
resentative of the self-made and 
self-educated Southern gentle¬ 


HON. EDWARD NEBLETT 
First Mayor of the Citv of Santa Rosa, Cal. 


man. He was a son of Edward H. Neblett, who was born in 1785, in Prince 
George County, Virginia, and a grandson of one of two Neblett brothers 
who settled at Jamestown, Va. In 1876 he had the distinction of being the 
first to fill the Mayor’s chair. 


23 







































Class of Catech.am.eus Confirmed Palm Sunday 
| April 4.*W0S 


Rev K.A. H. Thiede 


German Evangelical Lutheran Church 

After two preliminary meetings, presided over by Rev. A. 
O. Mortved the Bethlehem Scandinavian Evangelical Luth¬ 
eran Church was organized at the residence of Mrs. G. L. 
Graven, February ioth, 1904. This meeting was presided 
over by Prof. N. J. Lohre of Jewell Lutheran College, Iowa. 

The church building was erected in 1905 and dedicated 
May 21 st, the same year. 

Ministers in charge since organization has been: Rev. B. 
K. Barstad, Rev. N. Askeland and at present, pro tern., Rev. 
Th. Himle 


Bethlehem 5candanavian Evangelical 
Lutheran Church 

Tn July, 1894, the Rev. J. A\ . Theiss, formerly of Portland, 
Ure began work among the Lutherans of Santa Rosa, and 
m 1899 the First German Evangelical Lutheran, St. Luke’s 
ongi egation, was organized. In the fall of the same year 
the above church edifice was erected and dedicated for divine 
worship In 1904 Rev. Theiss accepted a call to Los Angeles, 
Cal., and the present pastor the Rev. K. A. H. Thiede took 
C ar G 1 le COp g re gation. The total membership is now 

T* hmif o/~»o 


24 


































CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 


25 


UNITARIAN CHURCH 



































THE. CITY RESERVOIR 



ROSE CARNIVAL- Miss Dorothy Fitts 

Second Prize, Tandem Team 



the McDonald reservoir 



26 


ROSE CARNIVAL—The Misses Hahmann 

First Prize for Two-seated Carriage 








































r^clmi ICAN printing Hr^sr/ 


‘fiCF uWCfi 


REPUBLICAN ” PRINTING HOUSE. 


27 


























Banquet Under the Oaks at the California Home for Feeble Minded Children, Uldridge, Sonoma Co., Cal 

HVVOO. u, EU ' l &&'& *,1!? v fr ° f ! he / and - "'"‘V '7°° acres, 

Building! June'^ Wl "' J ' DaWSOn ' Medkal Superintendent. ' Above photo was taken a! (6 '?< ? nd & " d «*»■ years. 


e of the 


with improvements is nearly 

- js 15 5,000; support fund for the 

laying of the corner stone of the Administration 


28 

















UPPER: MAIN BUILDING. STATE HOME, ELDRIDGE. SONOMA CO„ CAE. 
LOWLR: SCARF DRILL AT THL HOML 











The New Four-Cylinder 30 H. P. Reo 




O. L. Houts 


Stoddard-Dayton, Fred J. Wiseman at the wheel, 
holds round-bay record and has defeated every other car 
raced against in 1908. 


The Stoddard-Dayton, Winner of California Grand Prize Road Race, 1909 




The Race 


HOUT5 AUTO CO., AGLNTS for RLO and 5TODDARD-DAYI ON AUTOMOBILL5, 5ANTA R05A, CAL 

30 












































Mrs. H. Pohlmann, .Second Prize 


The Isis Club, Ihird Prize 








& 


First Prize Single Ri, ^ ^ ^ 

SOME PRIZE WINNERS AT THE ROSE CARNIVAL MAY 8. 1908 


Mrs. O. L. Houts, First Prize Natural Flowers 






















P. GE.ORGL 5ULLIVAN, Plumbing and Heating, 626 Fourth Street 


rrominent Duiiaings in wnicn work nas recently been installed bv P Gen Sullivan- rfninn x-, * e • r, , _ 

House, Phoenix building, 1 . O. O. F. building, Ursuline College, C. C. Donovan building Press Democrat buildfni"^ T^n Sa , vln £ s B, ank ’ H 
mg, Columbia Opera House, Livernash building, Santa Rosa; Elmhurst Academy, St. Hdena; Grammar Schoofb^ 


Johnson building, Fire Department bui 
for Feeble Minded Children, 


32 

































































"r"v“ 



VIILW ON LAKE JONIVL 


33 












Interior View of R. C. Moodey & Son’s Store 


Richardson’s Business College—Day and Night Classes. Business 
Course, $40; Stenograph Course, $40; Telegraph Course, $50. 



J. T. Townson, Furniture and Upholstering 


Office of Dr. A. B. Hubbel, Dentist 
34 

































uJ 

' (— 
E ID 

IS 


o 

o 

uJ 

o 

o 


_J < Q 

. — . 


>■ z , 
uJ UJ 

-J Q 

cO —1 

O “- 1 
E cO 




































CITRU5 FAIR AT CLOVE.RDALL 


36 




















CITRU5 FAIR AT CLOVLRDALt 


37 

















Campbell & Coffey, Dealers in and Manufacturers of Monuments, Vaults, Tablets and Coping—Works and Yard 29 .South Main 
Street, Near Bridge, Santa Rosa. 



CANTON SANTA ROSA, NO. 23 P. M., 1. O. O. F 





































S T DAKLN 




SONOMA VALLEY 


RUSSIAN RIVER 


,"■ • - «/■ gbt . t/ .. #A ¥r ; #/VJ , 


5. T. DAKLN’5 ART SCHOOL, SANTA ROSA, CAL. 


39 














































































RESIDENCE OF FRANK A. BRUSH, CasFiier Santa Rosa National Bank 


40 



































LODGE, ROOM of 5ANTA R05A PARLOR 


No. 28. NATIVE SONS of the GOLDEN WEST 


41 




























C.W.GILLE 


JTl.J DONAHUE 

^-*G«« vtfjj Cl«- r| 


POST OFFICE 


RE.EK5TR0M 


U. 5. POST OFFICE, 5ANTA R05A 


42 















HOMF OF SANTA ROSA FRLE- PUBLIC LIBRARY f6ooo especially donated to repair the damage done by the earthquake in iqo6. 

The “1 Andrew Carnegie .0 .he Ci.y for « 

SSfLteffl 0! Sc^ Sa Yrf «ior, --^-^d^pS^^^orn .he hoi,ding. Ending P a mp h.e. S and Governs. re P „r.s, .her. are 

.W.MS oXTh^s^ Tnf““fe fopnlar P uh,.c ins.i.nhon ,n our Cy. 






















EPISCOPAL CHURCH and RECTORY 


44 






























































VIEW ON RU55IAN RIVER 


45 













PORTION OF 5LBA5TOPOL CITY and 5TRPLT 5CE.NL 


46 




































LAKES and WATER WHEEL near SEBASTOPOL 


47 




















PROMINENT TEACHfcR5 


of the COUNTY TLACHLR5 


HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS and some 


48 





GIRLS 


HIGH SCHOOL 


OF 50NOMA COUNTY 



■«g 

- - -y 1 











Kfiu 1 - - V s 

i • Jr S- 


4 M 

■ "'V : kj^ 

















































VILW5 OF GRATON and the GRE.E.N VALLEA FRUIT COUNTRY 

49 
































CD 

+-> 

$ S > 

!2<3I 

s ® ” 

£ _P 51 
p . 

UJ § > 

<1) •> r K 

f 8 ^ 

2 . O Q 

m- 2 *■*=• 

o -g O 

D/) ® 
u o 
c -on c 

<D C <D 

fO '-3 IS 

* CO (0 (/3 

<u o 
a: _l 


o 

in 


>- 

a) 

c u 
a c 


c 

o 

lx 

(0 

Q. 


c <u 
U ‘ 


x 

(Ocfc 

£ 3 ^ 

° o 
C .is & 

o o . 
0) -+-> 

N r 0) O 
0) 

rQ — 1 U 

0) Q-c-s 


(/) 


<« 


a) 


o U 

S 

"S £ a) <° 
</> - “5 
o “ o 
&l O os: 































I 


4 


t 



& RE CRAWFORD 


J. W. BARROWS 


FRANK L.HOYT 

_ Jtutllt _ 


B.D. KENNEDY 


L.A.PRF5SLFY 


iR MAN 


Trustee 


BARACA 

CLAbb 


IEANDER TURNEY 


PHILATHLA CLASS 


BAPTIST CHURCH 


HARRY BREWER WTj 


/AISS L FARMER bw* 


J. HERBERT 


D7N. HUDSON 


T>EACON 


Cic.rn 


•Pe ACON 


JBLL&2SL. 


Ttwsru 


. YlLs* C. 

; #.-VV| ; '1 

A ^ j 

IfcAcT- 

' T- V’ '>xT. 







V 





THOMPSON i: 

TRUSTEE 



i 


IbS 


M,,. 

SI 


=8 

li ^ 

Sf wfzriz: 

i ' , - 

It ** 7? s9 
Jii ; ■ 

fYli *1' * 

p 

Ji ll 

f :■ 

1 £ a ir^£l 


| L 



R ~ 



i . 

1 jT ip )j 

l ,... r 







v.*,£ 





FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND OFFICERS 


51 













































































RLV. WILLIAM MARTIN, M. A. 
Minister 


IRST SERVICES were held 1855. 
Congregation organized in 1856, 
and re-organized in 1862. Services 
held first in the old Court House, 
later in the Methodist Church. 
First church building was on the corner of Fifth 
and Humboldt Streets, and was dedicated in 1869. 

The present edifice was erected in 1891 a 
total cost of $18,000. The present pastor has 
occupied the pulpit since 1895. The total mem¬ 
bership for March, 1909, was 350. 



FIRST 

PRL5BYTLRIAN 

CHURCH 


52 











































RINCON and GRLLN VALLLY5 


53 

















. A 


Miss. Lou Farmer Six A. a-nd Seventh B. 


Mrs. Lud.& 


V. Bar him 


Fifth B. 



MiSS. Floy Pedigo Six -A. 



J. E. Cudi eback Principal Seventh A- 



FRLMONT SCHOOL PUPILS 


54 





























* t 


»• JR 


Miss. Harriet 5 mith Third A aiul Fourth 


THIV:- • * - ' 

! ^. *' . .JlK 7"^ 

•t ?'; Vi' 34- 1 it*; - 

•ij h * 5 *3$ % ,T S V * 1 

\/jf v '. Ijl ! d £ * 


»«*r >t- 








:f | j'J* I «J»i *• k.^ ? 

’* $• k,# Si f m •*’ 


SI*'? 4*. .'• 
r '.• ? - 


: m : \X >,r* * fttfBr tA* % 

l / y ££ ' w - ' * ~ v* C A j ■ ® 


MiSS. Ada Royal Six B 


— ..':--i .... ii0 i& 


Miss. Caroline Reeves 


First A.*" d Third B. 


Miss. Helen Wright 


rSi 




»'S* 


c 


■m 




eccona A.beccon 


ss Alice iaumbaug 


FRE.MONT SCHOOL PUPIL5 


55 




















NORTHWESTERN DEPOT 


■'s a 'V' r ’ -ty- 


-»»K i 


SOUTHREN PACIFIC DEPOT 


56 































ip . * y ' y 










*WHs 


hcLdSkJBC- 




..,***23 


- 




frw&ww' 


NO.1465. NORTH 


WESTERN PACIFIC RR. DEPOT, HEALDSBURG. 


T-J JMtUl * Bl 






DLPOT at HLALD5BURG 


57 






















Rose Bush at the Home of W. D. REYNOLDS 


Japanese Cherry Tree in Bloom at Hotel Lebanon 


53 
















































_ _ rn^rRDVF Prop Mendocino Ave., 5anta Rosa, Cal. 


59 

















5T. R05E/5 CHURCH, PASTOR, 5E.MINARY and SCHOLARS 


St Rose’s Church is the first stone building erected in Santa Rosa. The corner stone was laid in 1900 and it was dedicated under the patronage of St. Rose, after whom the City of 
Santa Rosa also is named. Catholic Missionaries lead by Junipero Serra came to California in 1769 and began to Christianize and civilize the native Indians. They estab¬ 
lished a bain of missions from San Diego to San Rafael. A missionary, Jaun Amoroso, baptized an Indian girl in 1829 in the creek, and as it was August 30, the feast of St. Rose, 
he e-ave her the name of Rose. The Indians then called the creek Santa Rosa and so the city built on it afterwards, was named Santa Rosa. A Catholic church, a small frame 
building, was erected in i860 and this was succeeded in 1900 by the present stone building. 

60 













































NO. 130 S. WATERSARN.VAL HEALDSBURG.190e. 


WATER CARNIVAL AT HLALDSBURG 


TUKM1L1. A MtLLSA PHOTO.*.F 


61 













CLUB ROOMS, LLK5’ HOML, SANTA ROSA 


62 















































SANTA ROSA BUSINLSS BLOCKS 


























































































A HOLIDAY at the GOLDEN GATE ORPHANAGE at LYTTON 


64 












.60 Dtp. 




DEPARTMENT 






ASX ■ 
i 


-- 




a A 

‘Vv:- 

s '. csr.sd;-i*i!\ 


• i i 1 ■ >1' I'!! 1 ‘ II! i Hi)-j- 


! J ,* 


TTl 


— ■ 




SONOMA COUNTY FRUIT AND PRODUCL CO., Inc 


—Packers of Ranch Lggs, Retailers of Grain and Groceries, Santa Rosa, Cal. 


65 














































HIGH SCHOOL, SANTA ROSA 


66 

























Fremont School 
Lincoln School 



67 


Faculty Fremont School 
Burbank School 


j > -A 




























MILL CRLLK, SONOMA COUNTY 



68 
























Dr. S. S. BOGLE 


X. Ray Laboratory 


Consultation Room 


Laboratory 


Pathological 


Treatment Room 


Operating 


OFF1CL5 OF DR. 5. 5. BOGLE, 


69 






































































LEVIN TANNERY and SHOE FACTORY 



70 





















































































BUSINESS HOUSES and INDUSTRIES 










































































































■«TT 




TLACHLR5 AND PUPIL5 OF LINCOLN SCHOOL. 




























































ROSLLAND and SOUTH PARK SCHOOLS and PUPILS 



74 





















METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, SOUTH ofwhich 

In 1853 Bishop Soule appointed Solomon South was erected and Santa 

Santa Rosa church formed a part In 1868 the t, t orl ina) building stood on Fifth 
Rosa became a station, with Samuel Brown as P*st°£i * the new church was built at a 

Street, near B.and was moved to»the presents . Q f property, $20,000; good Sunday School, 
cost of $16,000. Present membership, 260;'JVUsson Societies. The pastor, 
Epworth League and Woman’s Home and Foreign miss.o 

Francis A. Downs, came here from Texas in iqo6. 


METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH 

It is probable that in 1854 the work of the Methodist Episcopal church was begun in Santa Rosa bv the 
Rev. A. L. S. Bateman. In 1886 services were held in the court house. In 1858 a lot on Third and D Street’s was 
purchased for $80. A church was soon built and there the congregation worshipped until the present structure on 
Fourth Street was occupied. A parsonage was erected on Third Street in r886. In 1906 it was sold and a parson¬ 
age was purchased at 830 Fifth Street. The membership is 339. The enrollment of the Sundav School is 245. 
Monroe H. Alexander is pastor, J. H. Brush, president of the Board of Trustees and R. C. Moodey, superintendent 
of the Sunday School. 

75 









































es .Fourth: Grade and Miss Hattie Johnson 3 


Miss. Edna Murdock Fifth Grade 


Miss. Hazel Taylor Second Grade 


Miss. Jessie R. Smith Prin. A Eighth Grade 

and 

Miss. Josephine Van Wormer 


PUPIL5 OF BURBANK SCHOOL 


76 



























SAVINGS BANK OF SANTA ROSA 



77 

















■■Hi 


JFURSELL, tiler. 


w h.suMm-rs, e.l.k 


JF BERRY, E- L'K. 


D. H LAFFERTY, L. ff. 


F. E DOWD, PER 


C 0.DUNBAR Si 


W FA MA GE, Cha pla im 


F C AEWVAX Ejq, 


RECEPTION ROOM-EULS CLUB-SANTA ROSA LODGE 64 6 


tv Keegan, t^stci 


h g , j pc-, ■ n 




OFFICLR5 LLK5 CLUB, 5ANTA ROSA LODGE,, NO. 646 


78 


























































































QULLN\S FLOAT, Rose Carnival Parade, 5anta Rosa, May 8, 1909 


79 




















LOU 


DILLON, 158 1 >, the Fastest Trotter in the World. Bred, Born, Raised and Trained at Santa Rosa 


m r 


■ 


80 



















5 ANT A ROSA 5TOCK FARM, FRANK TURNLR, Prop. 


Sidney Dillon Sire of Lou Dillon 
. Owned by Sterling R Holt Indianapolis 


^ ^ a s* 


v o^ 


Guy Dillon 31 SB8-2.23.h 
Sire-Sidney Dillcn-Dam-By 


SANTA ROSA STOCK FARM 

Frank S. Turner Proprietor 


G 




mikt ° n 


in 


* 08 * 


InfrrJottx 


2 04 \ 


Frank S- Turner 
the Man who 
Broke Lou Dillon 


Lou Milton Age 13 Dam of Lou Dillon 


Lou Ddlon 1.5 8 & 


Willard F. Sanders 
the Man who 
trained Lou Dillon 


C3V2.1&X 


California Dillon 


<jy 






























































r 

y 


STRLLTS IN SANTA ROSA 

Upper Third Street 
Upper College Avenue 































Golden Gate Orphanage and Grounds at Lytton. 


INDUSTRIAL FARM FOR CHILDREN MAJOR and MRS. C. W. BOURNE., Superintendents 

GOLDLN GATL ORPHANAGL and , , G , Orphanage,” was founded In October, 1904, and was the outgrowth of a small home 

a - I a inctrial Home at Lyttons, known as Uol f. e J? ^ in fearing children are not to be obtained in the city, the Army officers bent their efforts 
The Salvation Army s Industria cm - Rea ij z j ng that the best results >'purchase price was $52,000, and a mortgage was necessary for one-half 

that had previously been maintained m Sa u fmaHy chose the site a^ y t * ' 5ig home^n Sonoma county, twenty miles from Santa Rosa. Major C. W. Bourne 

toward procuring weremoved from the little home m^San^lFranceISCOW was beg „„. At flrst there were only a small number of little ones. Today there 

and hiTwife w.!e installed as superintendents, and the use u o ^ 










































ACTIVITIES at the GOLDEN GATE ORPHANAGE at LYTTON5 

are 200 happv, healthlv and useful children quartered there. Every one is learning from books, from teachers, and from work, how to do the things that good, honest, useful men and 

women must do to take their parts and their places in the work of the world. 

They have from 2000 to 2500 fowls on the place, and conduct one of the largest poultry farms in the State. The Hotel St. Francis, in San Francisco, depends entirely upon 

this farm for the eggs that are served on the tables of that well-known hostelry. The boys themselves do nearly all the work on this farm. Besides the poultry farm, the Home main¬ 

tains a dairy, and the boys attend the cow's. 

The girls also have their tasks. The older girls care for the little babies; they do most of the sewing and most of the housework in the buildings on the place. 

84 


Each of 















































SNAP SHOTS at the GOLDEN GATE ORPHANAGE at LYTTONS 


• f i - Cities no task escapes them. Everybody is busy most of the time at Lyttons. and the malevolent personage who conducts the 
them learns to cook, and in all thewide range of housewiey the little men and women who are" wards of Major Bourne and his good wife. The tasks of learning and of doing are 

Idle Hands Employment Agency finds precious htt ebusiness aitma ba|anced for men tal and physical development. Among the employments that are both work and recreation is the 

judiciously varied by rest and recreation, so that th most 0 f the players being orphan boys, 

keeping-up of a good band of music under competent teachers, moa . 

OD 



























— 




PRUNL ORCHARDS IN BLOOM IN SPRING 
















Z?, e !"'"o 




fiOK-'/r. 




J. G. DuBose 








1 i 






M W\% 


H. E. LaCell 

Rose City Market, DuBose & LaCell, Proprietors, Dealers in Groceries, 


Fruits and Choice Canned Goods, 625 Fourth St., 


Phone S. R. 74 



Portion of Feliz Meat Market, 5. J. Feliz, Proprietor, 540 Third St. 


St. Rose Drug Store, Wm. McK. Stewart, Proprietor 


87 






























































BURBANK’S FRUITFUL SPINELESS CACTUS and Experimental Grounds at Santa Rosa 


















BURBANK’S PRODUCTIONS: 

Sugar Prune 

Chestnut Tree, Three Years Old 


Gold Plum 
Gigantic Amaryllis 


89 























Burbank Grapes, Loganberries and other Productions 


90 
















& j 


ili 




, AllwnRY Main Office 312 FourthSt., Phone S. R. 158, Laundry, First and A Sts 
SANTA R05 A PIONLLR LAUNDRY, Main 


91 




















FROM OUR GARDUN5 


92 









MASONIC TLMPLEL and Officers and Members of Santa Rosa Commandery, K. T. 


93 




































































OCCIDENTAL HOTEL, BANE BR05., Owners and Proprietors 

Frontage on three streets, 130x200 ft. Modern in all its appointments, absolutely fireproof, ail re-inforced concrete, corner Fourth and B Streets. 


94 


























J. L.ROBERTS , W.P. 


Tf.F. SALISBURY , V, p 


J.V. PEMBERTON, Ch 


I AcASUHtH 




S.J. GILLIAM, I.&. 


OFFICERS OF SANTA ROSA AERIE, No. 210, Fraternal Order of Eagles 

95 


J PBERRY. PM 


OLD 






























Sonoma Girl a.os/< 


Dorset Ram 


Berkshire B 
Artful L 


ee 52 63 0 


5TOCK FARM OF 5. B. WRIGFIT, Two Miles West of 5anta Rosa, Along the EJectric Road 


96 




















































































































oriel Congregational Church 


HOYT BR05., Contractors and Engineers of Northern California. Main Office: 5anta Rosa, Cal. 5an Francisco Office: Builders’ Exchange, Box 438 

98 





































FETTERS’ HOT SPRINGS, Agua Caliente, Cal. 


manor House 


House 


'$*#■ 


CLU B 



. Garage for Autos, Beautiful Drives and Walks, Natatorium and Private Tub Mineral Bathing. The natural waters hot from these springs are highly mineralized and 
springs into the baths at a temperature of 118 degrees. Terms: $14.00 per week; by the day, $2.50 including baths. Open the year round. Send for our new booklet 
-prings, Agua Caliente, Sonoma County, California. 


come direct from the 
Address: Fetters’ Hot 


99 








































BLLDLN & HE.HIR, Wholesale and Retail Manufacturers and Dealers in Harness and Saddlery 



























KATHERINE SANITARIUM, Miss Sylvia Hatch, Superintendent, 905 McDonald Ave. 








































































































Three Well Known Stallions Owned by Jas. J. Summerfield, D. V. 5., Veterinary Surgeon, Santa Rosa, Cal 


103 
















































mm*, 



STREETS IN SANTA ROSA 


104 






























































SANTA ROSA BANK 






SANTA ROSA-VALLEJO TANNING CO 



SANTA ROSA FIRL DEPARTMENT 



105 


Elome of B. D. Kennedy, 726 CEierry Street 

Agent Continental Building and Loan Association 







































Gathering on Santa Rosa Old Folks Day, Mr. Diamond in Center 
Age 1 13 Years 



WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS 





T*| 



ESSl 







tjsf IT; 




& 

f an . 

jfji 



Interior View of Hall’s Art Store, one of Santa Rosa’s Prettiest Stores, Located at 
515 Fourth Street, Santa Rosa 



106 















































BANQUET OF PIONLLR5, APRIL, 1892 
























































































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